Monday, August 27, 2007

Doctrine of Creation

I know there is a lot of evidence out there for evolution. We're silly not to believe it, right? This post isn't about whether or not evolution is true, necessarily, but more about the doctrine of creation. For example, how do you explain to a kid being taught evolution in school that we owe our very existence to God, if we just evolved from some ape? How do you convince him his life has meaning and purpose if we just got here by an extraordinary series of random chances? And, how do you explain the existence of a soul? Did it evolve, too, or do apes have souls? Is the soul just a higher form of consciousness? If that's all it is, does it just fade away when the body dies? Or am I even asking the right questions about this??

Not surprisingly, I have my own thoughts about this, but I'd like to hear someone else's first.

Friday, August 24, 2007

Religion Under Attack?

I saw this on the CNN website, and personally, as a Christian aware of the history of us being fed to lions and the cost of what it means to be a Christian in other countries even today, I found it a little alarming. Religion is still well and strong in my neck of the woods, but apparently not so much in other places. Or, does CNN just attract atheists and anti-religious people?

Anyway, check out the website and the comments left by readers on it and let me know what you think. I tried to tell my son the other day Christianity wasn't in danger of fading away, and his response was pretty much, "You mean like those who followed Egyptian gods or Apollo?" So, does anyone know of a religion that has been around continuously longer than Christianity? Yeah, I know I could do the research myself, and probably will. Anyway, that's for another post. I'm interested to know what your response is to the people who commented on CNN's story. Do you think that's typical of what's going on in the USA, the same as it's always been, or a backlash against religion in light of recent world events?


http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/08/23/faith.reader.feedback/index.html

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Sweet Nothingness

I'm not sure we're done with the previous post and I want to encourage everyone to keep commenting there, but I'm going to go ahead and throw up another subject for us to chew on. Since the last post concerned hell, it kinda follows this one should be about heaven.

My son worries we'll lose a big part of our humanity in heaven. For example, it seems natural that we would mourn for those we know who didn't make it into heaven and are being tortured in hell for eternity. How do you just forget about them and enjoy yourself? How do you stop missing the brother who didn't make it or the friend you didn't talk to about spiritual things? And how do you live with the guilt that maybe you didn't try hard enough to warn them about hell? No one wants to cry and feel guilty, but if you erase those emotions (i.e., God wipes away the tears himself) from the human psyche, don't you lose a part of what makes up the human experience? Without sorrow, how can we fully experience joy?

And what other emotions are we going to lose in heaven? What about our curiousity? If we know everything and we have all our answers now, what's left to explore? Are we just going to sit around? What about the joy of a job well done? Is everything just going to be handed to us in our mansions? Now, some religions believe we'll be able to have sex in heaven, but if the purpose of sex is to procreate and we don't really need to do that anymore, can we count on that? (He's a teenage boy, he worries about these things, okay?)

Do we even have our freewill still in heaven? Surely no one would be stupid enough to choose hell even after they're in heaven, but it sounds a lot like we become more robotic than human.

So, what's your idea of heaven and where did you get that idea?

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Destined for Hell?

Okay, this is a question my son has asked me before. I think I know the answer, or at least one that satisifes me, but I'd like to know what y'all think.

Christianity claims that God knows everything. If God knows everything, then He knows that some people whom He creates will end up in hell. Why would God create people who are destined for hell?

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Christian Apologetics

I've been in and out of churches all my life and I have yet to run across a class offered in churches concerning Christian apologetics. Why is that? We're required as Christians to be able to give a ready response to the hope that is in us, but so few lay people can. There are all kinds of books on the market concerning this subject and it's been researched and written about for centuries, but when you talk to other Christians about it, they can only give you the conclusions they've been handed. Very few can actually talk about the history and the research done on those conclusions. And I am just as guilty of this as anyone I've talked to about it. Now, there are very well-learned men and women out there who have done the research on their own, but I wish, as I had been growing up, classes in this had been offered. I think it would have really been a help to me to know more about why I believe what I believe. It is only been recently as I tried to ask my teenage son's questions about life, God, the Bible, etc., that I have realized how embarrassingly little I know about how to defend my faith and how ill-prepared I am to answer his questions.

So, this blog will be about my search for that. I don't know where it will take me, but I'm excited about the possibilities. If you want to join in and give your opinion or ask your own questions, I invite you to do so. You don't have to be a Christian or believe in God to have a voice here, but I do ask that everyone be respectful. Derogatory, ridiculing and rude comments will be deleted, whether it's coming from an atheist or professing Christian. I will try not to delete comments as much as possible, but personal attacks will not be tolerated. I don't want to get in flame wars but I do want honest opinions and ideas. My goal is not to win an argument but to get a better, broader, firmer grip on truth for myself and if you learn something, too, than everybody wins.

My topics will center around things my son and I are discussing, books I'm reading, or something that just flitted through my head.

So this is my first question that I'm just going to throw out there...is religion, as a whole, good for society? Is it still relevant or are we evolving past the need for it?